Quote:
Originally Posted by Ighalli
Thanks for the great information, Gandalf and Edi!
Gandalf, that sounds exactly like COE2 recruiting. Does that mean if you're on the lookout for e.g. a scout that you have to go check the recruiting screen each turn until one shows up? In COE, there would be announcements when wizards or heroes were available for hiring but not for normal commanders. Do the commanders stick around for more than one turn if you don't hire them immediately?
Does the hammer resource represent Dom style resources? What is the brown resource (supplies?) that seems to be common to the characters?
So how does one level up the mages in this game? Are experience stars helpful to spell casters? I know there are booster items; do they make spellcasters go to a higher level or add more known spells? Is there also something equivalent to Dom empowering? We've seen what level 1 and 2 guys get on the screenshots, but what about level 3 or 4 casters?
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Recruitment in CoE3 is a curious thing which has an entire page dedicated to it in the manual. There are two types, standard and special. Special recruitment has three different subtypes.
The short version is that you an always recruit from the standard list and doing so ends recruitment at that castle for that turn.
The three types of special recruitment are commanders, announced units and unnannounced units, which can be either be one-offs or multiples and which either end recruitment or don't.
Commanders and announced units always generate a recruitment offer message. Unannounced units don't, so for those you need to check every turn. Most nations don't have them, only some (like the Troll King). One-offs vanish from the list as soon as recruited, multiples can be recruited in several castles, but only once per castle. Some one-offs don't end recruitment, so you can recruit them and something else, but they are not common.
You can always recruit all commanders on offer, even if you already ended recruitment at that citadel. As long as you have the gold, of course, and in some cases iron as well. And all special recruitment offers must be reacted to immediately, they won't be there next turn.
As for resources, the hammer symbol is iron. The brown symbol is a cart full of goods and represents trade points (no trading between players, just exchanging gold for a special resource or vice versa).
Leveling up mages is a curious thing. Some (usually class mages) may or may not have rituals that upgrade them to more powerful status. Most esoteric mages (i.e. other, non-class mages) must first find a booster item and then learn higher level spells. New spells can be acquired, but the opportunities are finite. Level 3 is the maximum level of spells.
Experience stars work much the same as they do in Dominions. The bonuses are a little different but the basics are the same.